Department of Biology, Mercer University, Macon, GA, USA.
J Anat. 2018 Dec;233(6):807-813. doi: 10.1111/joa.12888. Epub 2018 Oct 9.
Cranial sutures are fibrous connective tissue articulations found between intramembranous bones of the vertebrate cranium. Growth and remodeling of these tissues is partially regulated by biomechanical loading patterns that include stresses related to chewing. Advances in oral processing structure and function of the cranium that enabled mammalian-style chewing is commonly tied to the origins and evolution of this group. To what degree masticatory overuse or underuse shapes the complexity and ossification around these articulations can be predicted based on prior experimental and comparative work. Here, we report on a mouse model system that has been used to experimentally manipulate dietary material properties in order to investigate cranial suture morphology. Experimental groups were fed diets of contrasting material properties. A masticatory overuse group was fed pelleted rodent chow, nuts with shells, and given access to cotton bedding squares. An underuse group was deprived of cotton bedding as well as diverse textured food, and instead received gelatinized food continuously. Animals were raised from weaning to adulthood on these diets, and sagittal, coronal and lambdoid suture morphology was compared between groups. Predicted intergroup variation was observed in mandibular corpus size and calvarial suture morphology, suggesting that masticatory overuse is associated with jaw and suture growth. The anterior region of the sagittal suture where it intersects with the coronal suture (bregma) showed no effect from the experiment. The posterior sagittal suture where it intersects with the lambdoid sutures (lambda) was more complex in the overuse group. In other words, the posterior calvarium was responsive to dietary material property demands while the anterior calvarium was not. This probably resulted from the different strain magnitudes and/or strain frequencies that occurred during overuse diets with diverse material properties as compared with underuse diets deprived of such enrichment. This work highlights the contrasting pattern of the sutural response to loading differences within the calvarium as a result of diet.
颅缝是在脊椎动物颅骨的膜内骨之间发现的纤维结缔组织关节。这些组织的生长和重塑部分受到生物力学加载模式的调节,包括与咀嚼相关的应力。口腔加工结构和功能的进步使哺乳动物式咀嚼成为可能,通常与该群体的起源和进化有关。咀嚼过度或不足在多大程度上塑造了这些关节周围的复杂性和骨化,可以根据先前的实验和比较工作来预测。在这里,我们报告了一个小鼠模型系统,该系统已被用于实验性地操纵饮食材料特性,以研究颅缝形态。实验组喂食具有不同材料特性的饮食。过度咀嚼组喂食颗粒状啮齿动物饲料、带壳坚果,并提供棉花垫方块。使用不足组被剥夺了棉花垫和各种纹理的食物,而是连续接受凝胶化食物。动物在这些饮食中从断奶到成年期被饲养,并比较了各组之间的矢状缝、冠状缝和人字缝形态。在下颌体大小和颅骨缝形态上观察到了预测的组间变异,表明咀嚼过度与颌骨和缝生长有关。矢状缝与冠状缝相交的前区(额骨)不受实验影响。与人字缝相交的矢状缝后部(lambda)在过度使用组中更为复杂。换句话说,后部颅骨对饮食材料特性要求有反应,而前部颅骨没有。这可能是由于过度使用具有不同材料特性的饮食与缺乏这种丰富性的饮食相比,发生了不同的应变幅度和/或应变频率。这项工作强调了由于饮食,颅缝对加载差异的反应模式在颅骨内存在差异。